The job market remains firm. Nonfarm payroll jobs grew 2.527 million (1.9%)
last year, the strongest increase since 2000. Moreover, the 252,000 rise during
December (2.1% y/y) followed upwardly revised gains of 353,000 and 261,000
during the prior two months, earlier reported as 321,000 and 243,000. A 243,000
increase had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. Firm job
gains were logged across sectors, but construction's 48,000 increase (4.9% y/y)
was the largest monthly gain since January of last year. The unemployment rate
declined to 5.6%, the lowest point since June 2008. A 5.8% rate had been
expected. The overall unemployment rate including marginally attached and part
time workers for economic reasons fell to 11.2%.

From the payroll employment survey, employment increased 252,000 last
month. The construction sector's strong rise of 48,000 was accompanied by a
17,000 increase in the factory sector, below the pace of the prior two months.
The service sector produced a lessened 173,000 employment gain last month, but
for the year the 2.2% increase was the third such gain in a row, the strongest
performance since the late-1990s. Professional & business services
employment improved 52,000 (3.9% y/y), including a 14,700 rise (7.8% y/y) in
temporary employment. Jobs in health care & social assistance gained 43,700
(2.4% y/y). Leisure & hospitality employment advanced 36,000 (2.9% y/y) and
financial sector payrolls grew 10,000 (1.9% y/y). Job gains were rounded out by
a 10,000 rise (1.9% y/y) in wholesale trade and a 7,700 increase (1.6% y/y) in
retail trade, which was by far the weakest gain since a decline in August. Jobs
in the government sector grew 12,000 (0.4% y/y) led by a 7,000 increase (0.4%
y/y) in state government. Local government jobs rose 4,000 (0.6% y/y) and
federal government employment ticked up 1,000 (-0.6%
y/y).

Employment growth remained fairly diffused last month with 63.6% of
industries increasing jobs, though that was down from the November peak of
69.7%. During the last three months, 73.7% of industries raised job levels.
Factory sector employment was raised in 58.0% industries and by 70.4% during the
last three months.

The length of the average workweek held at its recovery high of 34.6 hours.
The factory sector workweek dipped to 41.0 hours but the construction workweek
improved to a record 39.4 hours. The private services workweek held for the
fourth month at 33.4 hours. The index of aggregate hours worked (employment
times hours) rose 0.9% (2.8% y/y) in the fourth quarter. During the last ten
years, there has been a 69% correlation between the change in hours worked and
the change in real GDP.

From the household employment survey, the unemployment rate's decline
to 5.6% reflected an employment rise of 111,000 (1.9% y/y) and a labor force
decline of 273,000 (+0.7% y/y). The labor force participation rate returned to
62.7%, the lowest level since 1977, reversing a rise to 67.1% averaged in the
late-1990s. The civilian population grew a modest 0.9% last year, about the same
as in 2013.

The average duration of unemployment was fairly steady m/m at 32.8 weeks,
though that was down from 39.4 weeks in 2012. Long-term unemployment declined as
21.4% of those unemployed were out of work for more than 52 weeks, down from
31.4% in 2011.

By educational attainment, the unemployment rate for those with less than a
high school diploma was 8.6%. For those with a diploma but no college, it was
5.3%. For high school graduates with less than bachelor's degree, it was 4.9%
and for those with a bachelor's degree or higher, it was 2.9%.

The figures referenced above are available in Haver's USECON database.
Additional detail can be found in the LABOR and in the EMPL
databases. The expectation figures are from Action Economics and are in the AS1REPNA
database.

Declining Labor Force Participation and Its Implications for Unemployment and Employment Growth
from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago can be found here.